BORDEAUX and Champagne have their wine tours, and travellers flock to Scotland to sample the fine single malt whiskies. But in Jamaica, farmers are offering a different kind of trip for a different type of connoisseur. Call them ganja tours: smoky, mystical – and technically illegal – journeys to some of the island’s hidden cannabis plantations, where pot tourists can sample such strains as “purple kush” and “pineapple skunk”.

The tours pass through places such as Nine Mile, the tiny hometown of reggae star and famous pot-lover Bob Marley. Here, in Jamaica’s verdant central mountains, dreadlocked men escort curious visitors to a farm where deep-green marijuana plants grow out of the reddish soil. Similar tours are offered just outside the western resort town of Negril, where a marijuana mystique has drawn weed-smoking holiday makers for decades. “This one here is the original sinsemilla, Bob Marley’s favourite. And this one here is the chocolate skunk. It’s special for the ladies,” a pot farmer nicknamed “Breezy” says as he shows off several varieties on his plot.

While legalisation drives have scored major victories in recent months in some US states, and the government of Uruguay is moving toward getting into the pot business itself, the plant is still illegal in Jamaica, where it is known popularly as “ganja”. Some would like to see that change, with increasingly vocal advocates saying Jamaica could give its struggling economy a boost by taking advantage of the fact the island is nearly as famous for its marijuana as it is for beaches, reggae music and world-beating sprinters.

Justice Minister Mark Golding says the government is aware of legalisation efforts elsewhere, and calls the issue “dynamic and evolving quickly”. The Ganja Law Reform Coalition, an island group that is calling for the government to decriminalise and regulate pot, is preparing to host an international conference in the capital of Kingston in January. Topics will include prospects for cannabis commercialisation. Despite its laid-back international image, Jamaica is a conservative, religious place and many people bristle at the country’s Rasta reputation. Marijuana has been pervasive but prohibited on the island since 1913. The illicit marijuana crop has declined since the 1970s because of global competition and the US-led war on drugs. Still, Jamaica is the Caribbean’s leading supplier of pot to the US and tourists often don’t need to look further than their hotel lobby for assistance buying weed.

“There’s already a high degree of marijuana tourism in Jamaica; they just don’t call it that,” said Chris Simunek, editor-in-chief of the magazine High Times, based in New York. In Nine Mile, Breezy says Americans, Germans and increasingly Russians have toured his small farm and sampled his crop. There were no takers for the $US50 ($A53.62) tour on this morning among a couple of busloads of cruise ship tourists arriving at Bob Marley’s childhood home, though more than a dozen lined up enthusiastically to buy baggies of weed from Breezy’s friends, sold through a hole in the wall of the museum compound.

“I can get stronger stuff at home, but there’s something really special about smoking marijuana in Jamaica. I mean, this is the marijuana that inspired Bob Marley,” says a 26-year-old American tourist who only identified herself as Angie. An online holiday guide, Jamaicamax, promises to organise ganja tours in the Negril area. But there’s a caveat: first you have to smoke a marijuana “spliff” with your guide, presumably to show you are not law enforcement. After you smoke a spliff with us and we get to know you then we will take you on the best ganja tours in Jamaica and you’ll smoke (and eat if you want) so much ganja you’ll be talking to Bob Marley himself,” the travel website says.

More than a decade after a government commission said marijuana was “culturally entrenched” and recommended decriminalising personal use by adults, influential politicians and businessmen are pushing for Jamaica to cast off old fears of angering Washington and loosen up laws. Henry Lowe, a prominent Jamaican scientist who helped develop a cannabis-derived medication to treat glaucoma in the 1980s, says the island could quickly become a hub of marijuana tourism and research: “People could come down to Jamaica for medical marijuana treatment and health tourism because this has been our tradition, our culture.”
Indentured servants from India are thought to have brought the plant to Jamaica in the 19th century. Its use as a medicinal herb spread rapidly, with some people using ganja tea to alleviate aches and others using rum-soaked marijuana as a cold remedy. By the 1970s, marijuana became even more popular thanks to Rastafarian reggae stars like Marley and Peter Tosh.

For now, criminal gangs dominate the island’s marijuana trade, and turf wars fuelled in part by pot profits have long plagued gritty parts of Jamaica. But advocates say decriminalisation or legalisation would shift profits away from gangs, freeing money that now goes for arresting and jailing pot users. For Breezy and his friends, any reforms couldn’t come soon enough. “The government needs to free up marijuana soon, man, because it’s a natural thing, a spiritual thing,” says Breezy. “And the tourists love it.”

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Ganja tourism booming on the Bob Marley trail in Jamaica, amid calls to legalise marijuana, 10.0 out of 10 based on 1 rating